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SARAH HARMER'S I LOVE THE ESCARPMENT TOUR
Burlington native Sarah Harmer is
embarking on a seven-city concert and awareness raising tour along
Ontario's Niagara Escarpment. The tour will begin in Owen Sound on
June 14th and conclude at The Royal Botanical Gardens in Burlington
on June 26th.
Sarah got her musical start with
country rockers The Saddletramps and then formed her own band,
Weeping Tile, after moving to Kingston, Ontario. The group produced
three albums before Sarah recorded Songs For Clem (1999), a
collection of jazz and country standards, made as a Christmas
present for her Dad. This led to her first solo album of original
material, You Were Here, which received much critical acclaim,
including Time Magazine's pick as debut CD of the year in 2000.
2004's All of Our Names earned Sarah her first Juno Award, winning
the Adult Alternative Album of the Year
"The 'I Love the Escarpment' tour
idea came to me this winter. I had been pouring over studies,
reports, policies, websites, soaking in all I could about the
precious UNESCO World Biosphere Reserve that is the Niagara
Escarpment. The Niagara Escarpment is recognized as one of the
world's unique natural wonders. It is a green corridor ridge in
southern Ontario that runs from Niagara Falls northwest to Tobermory.
It is home to the oldest trees in eastern North America- 1000+ year
old white cedars, 40% of Ontario's rare plant species, countless
endangered and threatened species, and ancient aquifers and wetlands
that house and filter precious drinking water for Southern
Ontarians. I grew up on the escarpment on Mt. Nemo in north
Burlington; a wondrous plateau with remarkable woodlands, wetlands,
prime agricultural soils, and headwaters of 20+ creek tributaries
that originate on the high-ground and flow off the brow to Lake
Ontario.
A recent application attempt by the
aggregate industry to re-zone 200 acres of Escarpment Rural Land to
Mineral Extraction Land has galvanized myself and many other
concerned citizens to establish a campaign and committee. We have
been at work for the past four months Protecting Escarpment Rural
Land (PERL). The Provincial government needs to ban new quarries and
quarry expansions on the Niagara Escarpment. PERL, a growing group
of concerned citizens, is working to this end.
I figured that as well as going to
meetings, hiring experts, learning about the application process,
and meeting with countless planners and politicians, I could also
round up some musical friends and set off to walk the Bruce Trail
along the escarpment and play shows along the way. In this way we
could get up close to revere the natural wonders of the escarpment-
Southern Ontario's spine- and make merry music in communities along
the way. This land is environmentally sensitive and ecologically
diverse and is one of only three locations in Ontario that has the
international distinction and recognition as a United Nation's World
Biosphere Reserve.
I'll be playing acoustic versions
of songs new and old with a fine blend of musicians. We'll also be
experiencing the escarpment along the Bruce Trail and we encourage
others to come out for a show, a hike, or both."
All
TOUR DETAILS available on the
Live page |